AI Article Synopsis

  • Kids learn about things by watching what others do, but it's not clear how they decide when to learn from friends or by themselves.
  • In the study, kids aged 3 to 5 watched a video where four other kids found rewards in two boxes differently—three went for one box, and one went for the other.
  • The results showed that when kids didn't know which box had better rewards, they copied the majority. But when they knew the rewards were different, they went for the better one themselves.

Article Abstract

Humans have adapted well to diverse environments in part because of their ability to efficiently acquire information from their social environment. However, we still know very little as to how young children acquire cultural knowledge and in particular the circumstances under which children prioritize social learning over asocial learning. In this study, we asked whether children will selectively adopt either a majority-biased or payoff-biased social learning strategy in the presence or absence of asocial learning. The 3- to 5-year-olds (N = 117) were first shown a video in which four other children took turns in retrieving a capsule housing a reward from one of two boxes. Three of the children (the "majority") retrieved a capsule from the same box, and a single individual (the "minority") retrieved a capsule from the alternative box. Across four conditions, we manipulated both the value of the rewards available in each box (equal or unequal payoff) and whether children had knowledge of the payoff before making their own selection. Results show that children adopted a majority-biased learning strategy when they were unaware of the value of the rewards available but adopted a payoff-biased strategy when the payoff was known to be unequal. We conclude that children are strategic social learners who integrate both social and asocial learning to maximize personal gain.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105307DOI Listing

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